WESTBURy-Through Sunday, June 30: "The Pajama Game." (Westbury Music Fair, Westbury, L.I. Tuesdays through Fridays, and Sundays at 8:30. and Saturdays at 6 and 9: 3 0 .) WESTPoRT-Through Saturday, June 29 (no performance Wednesday, June 26): Faye Emerson in "Witness for the Prosecution" Wednesday, June 26. Nina Novak and a group of dancers from the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo. (Westport Country Playhouse, Westport, Conn. Mondays through Fridays, and Sunday, June 23, at 8:40, and Saturdays at 6 and 9. Matinees Thursdays at 2:40. For tickets, call CO 5-6179.) NIGHT LIFE (Some places \vhere you will find music or other entertainment. They are open every evening, except as indicated.) DINNER, SUPPER, AND DANCING AMBASSADOR. Park Ave. at 51st St. (PL 5- looo)-The Embassy Club, a landscape of almost a\vesome splendor, has dinner music until ten, at which time Chauncey Gray's orchestra and a rumba band come aboard. Closed Sundays. EL MOROCCO, 154 E. 54th St. (EL 5-8769)- A movie studio specializing in the comedy of manners, \vhich has undergone surprising changes in this generation. Charles Holden's orchestra and Freddy Alonso's rumba group provide dance music, which, in the circum- stances, is probably supererogatory. PIERRE, Fifth Ave. at 61st St. (TE 8-8000)- In the Cotillion Room, an orchestra headed by Joseph Sudy chortles a\vay with grace and agility whenever Alan Logan's rumba group takes a breather. Closed Sundays and Mon- days. . . . ç A small outfit, practically always Stanley Worth's, plays for dancing every night in the Café Pierre from cocktails through supper. Renato Rossini, who stays a\vay Sundays, operates a guitar that con- jures up heat \\,aves in the tropics and castles in Spain. PLAZA. Fifth Ave. at 58th St. (PL 9-3000)- After eight-thirty in the Rendez- V ous, which is to the manner born, the orchestras of Max- imillian Bergere and Gunnar Hansen sprint from one familiar tune to another. Closed Sundays. . . . C]f Leo LeFleur's string group, which hums during the cocktail hour in the Palm Court, cluses up shop on Friday , June 21 No dancing.... C]f The LeFleur group, which is also in action in the Edwardian Room at the dinner hour, bows out on Sun- day, June 23 No dancing. ROOSEVELT. Madison Ave at 45th St. (MU 6- 9200 )-Eddie Lane's summer-weight dance band is spinning summer-weight dance music in the big old Grill. Closed Sundays. ST. REGIS ROOF. Fifth t\.ve. at 55th St. (PL 3- 4500 )-High as the Alps in quality, partly because it's an alp itself, and glass-enclosed Milt Sha\\ 's and Ray Bari's small ensembles play, play, play for dancing. l\ll quiet Sun- days. SAVOy-PLAZA, Fifth Ave at 59th St (EL 5- 2600 )-Irving Conn's orchestra has slluat- ters' rights on the Café Lounge, where it saws away for any random dancers in tþe late afternoon and in the evening T AVERN-ON-THE-GREEN. Central Park W. at 67th St. (SC 4-8100)-People who like to be babes in the woods can play at it, on dry nights only, by sitting on the rim of the open-air terrace, which has dance music after eight weekday s and after seven Sundays WALDORF-AsTORIA. Park Ave. at 49th 5t (EL 5-3000)- The welkin of the Starlight Roof rings \\-ith unaccu,;ton1ed fervor when Sarah Vaughan, one of the founding females of pre:,ent-day jazz :,inging, and Joe Williams, the cataclysmic blues man, start riding on the ,\ ings of Count Basie and his crew, who have few equals in the field of rhythnlÎc noise. The band play s for dancing, too, and so does a gypsy orchestra. Closed Sundays. .. C]f VV' eekday s, in a ::,ecluded nook of Pea- cock Alley, the Alt Wien group led by J ozsi Ribari and the trio belonging to Bernie Leighton concoct sitting-down music from cocktails to eight-thirty, and then dance mu- sic until one; the gypsy band of the Starlight Roof takes care of the eight-to-h\elve Sunday dancing party. NOTE-The not too dizzying height known as the Rainbow Room serve,; as a lounge r- A f f c:),} p I I'" (VP?; , ')/ . / --:: = -""" '"'\... v /' 1r ) "-. ----......'" ,,-,""" .s :y (\ " " (from four-thirty to nine, except Sundays) where, over cocktails and swatches of non- dance music, you can look down, if you have a \Vindo\v table, on everyone else The ad- dress is 30 Rockefeller Plaza, the phone CI 6-5 8 00. SMALL AND CHEERFUL (No dancing, unless noted.) DRAKE ROOM, 71 E. 56th St (PL 5-0600): A stylized Forest of Arden evergreen and comfortable a::, can be, where Addison Bailey's sedate piano is audible at cocktails, dinner, and supper. Paul Morse subs for him Sundays.... LITTLE CLUB, 70 E. 55th St. (PL 3-9425): Well kno\vn for its displays of Johnny-jump-ups and lilies of the field Kurt Maier does a dinner-and-supper piano obbli- gato. Closed Mondays. . . . GOLDIE'S NEW YORK, 23 2 E. 53rd St. (PL 9-7245): Goldie Ha\v- kins, host, pianist, and news vender, performs in the midst of the Southern-style country fair that occupies his neat restaurant. Wayne Sanders is his alter ego at the instrument during the week; Fridays and Saturdays Bill Taylor sits in for him. The mUSIC starts early and lasts late Closed Sundays. . . . MONSIGNORE, 6 I E. 55th St. (EL 5- 2 070): l\lmost like being in Rome and dining as the Romans do. The strolling gypsies (T eo Fanidi is their ringleader) on the prem- ises are a tidy lot, wholeheartedly devoted to the art of the violin rather than to fortune- telling. The music begins at seven and goes on until one, or even later. Closed Sundays .. RSVP, 145 E. 55th St. (EL 5-0250): The city's tiniest music room, which soothes ur- bane as well as savage breasts from cocktail time until cockcrow time Sam Hamilton, of the boîte circuit, is the first pianist to report; Don Evans, of the show-business cir- cuit, is the second. Sunday nights, their holi- days, Don Feldman sits in at the key- board. . . . GA-TSBY'S, 873 First Ave., at 49th St. (PL 5-1067): Three million dollars' worth of décor, in the middle of v\ hich Maxine Thomas, a circumspect newcomer, plays calm piano and sings calm songs. She does the din- ner and supper stint every night but Sunday, which is curfew. . . . CHÂTEAU HENRI IV, 37 E. 64th St (RE 7-8818): This castle, now con- verted (\Vith very little change) into a restau- rant, is the home of Norbert Faconi and hb violin, vvhich operate in the best tableside manner after eight-thirty every night but Sunday. . . . WEYLIN. 4-0 E. 54th St. (PL 3- 4907). The older inhabitants of this bar-and- grill all smile (in anticipation) when Cy Wal- ter sits do\vn at the piano, which he does from cocktails through dinner, and again from ten till one-thirty or Ì\\'O. Closed Sundays.... LEFT BANK, 309 W. 50th St. (CO 5-8956): A segment of life upon the not so very wicked stage. Event,; here ,;vhich are on the posh side, begin at dinner; after ten, Hubbell Pierce joins in \vith polite 'vordb and music from behind his Mason & Hamlin, and the Lee Evans trio fills in his idle mon1ents. Closed Sundays.... EL CHICO. 80 Grove St., at Sheridan Sq. (CH 2-464 h ): The perma- nent picnic (Latin-American style) include,; a good deal of regional ::,inging and prancing. :some of it by the customers. Closed Sundays. . . . CASANOVA, 1528 Second Ave, at 79th St. (TR 9-8 I 13) : Just the sort of place its name- sake might have used for his more romantic wining-and-dining tête-à-têtes The accent, from the kitchen to the strolling music and the songs of Hélène Darcel, is French and environs Closed Sundays.... CHARDAS, 30"" E 79th St. (RH 4-9382): "Blossom Time" all over again, but a much more soothing blend of violin, \,oice, and zimbalon than the 5 Messrs Shubert ever served up. Dancing Closed Mondays.... WAVERLY LOUNGE. 10 3 Waverly PI. (AL 4-0776): Laurie Brewis, the bounding Londoner, is at the piano in the extremely matter-of-fact bar of the Hotel Earle, displaying his transatlantic repertory He gets going at eight. Mondays are his holi- days. . . . CHAMPAGNE GALLERY, 135 Macdougal St. (GR 7-9221): Armchairs and chaise longues, arranged in a manner conducive to conversation instead of mass participation Someone or Qther is always at the piano. BIG AND BRASSY COPACABANA, 10 E. 60th St. (PL 8-0900): It's cold turkey Monday, turkey soup Tuesday, and turkey hash the rest of the time, but hardy wayfarers should find the going better while Ella Fitzgerald, who knew bop \vhen it was only a boy, is doing the \vords and music. She departs on Wednesday, June 26 SU PPER CLU BS (No dancing, unless noted.) BLUE ANGEL, 152 E. 55th St. (PL 3-5998): Spivy, who addresses her modern-dress Rabelaisian ballads in the manner of Captain Bligh deal- ing with the mutiny on the Bounty, is back in the United States and in top form. The sardonicism is provided by the admira- ble Will Holt, a folk singer with humor, and Carol Burnett, who has been through television and lived to tell the tale, which is profusely illustrated. The exoticism is pro- vided by Chavala, a Mexican miss with a soprano voice. The eloquent background musings of Jimmy Lyons' restrained jazz trio and the piano of Bart Howard make ev erv- thing sound its best. . . . ç In the front room except Sundays, Alex Fogarty stroke::, his sociable piano for a boy-and-girl clientele at cocktail and dinner time; except Satur- days and Mondays, there's also a session, from 2 to 4 A.M., by the Lyonses. .. UPSTAIRS AT THE DOWNSTAIRS. 'Sixth Ave. at 51st St (CI 5-9465): Three ladies of odd but be- guiling quality in the shade of an astonishing new banana tree. They are Stella Brooks, conjurer of words and treader on clay feet; Blossom Dearie, home at last from Paris, with her artfully artless wav of singing jazz, and Nancy Noland, house mother and lullaby crooner to an earlier but still active genera- tion of night larks. The padrone is Julius Monk, a noted collector of such bric-a-brac. Closed Sundays. . BON SOIR, 40 W. 8th St. (OR 4-0531): Sylvia 5yms, a one-of-a-kind stylist of blues and ballads, is breaking up the local bousekeeping. She's kept compan) by the manic singing of Tiger Haynes, the Three Flames, and Jimmie Daniels, not to mention the free-associational remarks of Jimmie Komack, a bundle of very nervous energy It's best to go late and be prepared to stay late. Closed Mondays. . . . RED CARPET, 130 E. 56th St. (PL 5-4718): Felicia Sand- ers, for all her gone-with-the-wind dynamics, is a singer to be studied. with care and respect. She s under way about ten; a trio reports for duty earlier. The locale is hustle- bustle Dancing Closed Sundays.... ONE FIFTH AVENUE, Fifth Ave. at 8th 5t (SP 7- 7000): Familiar faces on the barrbom floor. Bob Downey and Harold Fonville never stra) far -from their twin pianos, which are in ac- tion while the songbird and jokesmith are having their coffee break. Right now, the songbird is Rosemary O'Reilly, who does aIf right for herself; the jokesmith is Joe) Carter, \vho once in a ,vhile mistakes quantit) for quality Sundays, when Mr. Carter is away, there are silent movies; Monda) nights, Miss O'Reilly is away. MOSTLY FOR MUSIC (Open later than most places, and no dancing, unless noted.) EDDIE CONDON'S, 47 W. 3rd St. (GR 5- 8 639): Hot news from the Sunny South, presented in the customary rough-and-ready fashion. Wild Bill Davison, Cutty Cutshall, Gene Schroeder, Bob Wilber, George Wettling, Leonard Gaskin, and Mr. Condon are in- volved In between times, the venerable Cliff Jackson is the professor. Tuesdays, visiting tooters compound the interest. Closed Sun- days. . . . VILLAGE VANGUARD, 178 Seventh Ave. S., at 11th St (CH 2-9355): A valuable addition to the roster of music rooms. Irwin Corey, whose speech pattern is almost en- tirely a sort of progressive jazz, and the